Tuesday, January 30, 2007
My Mom's Apron
Monday, January 29, 2007
Garden Gnomes
Friday, January 26, 2007
Bulletin Board Makeover
Vegetation & Gardening in Las Vegas
Thursday, January 25, 2007
The Latest Relief for Male Home Owners...
The hottest new home décor item for the man who has everything? A home urinal.
''This is another way to make men feel pampered, the way the bidet made a woman feel her bathroom was complete,'' says Long Island architect Paul Rice.
Toilet manufacturers are flush with success at this new market. Toto U.S.A. which added a home urinal to its line in 2005 for $975, has gone from selling dozens to hundreds a month in the last year. Villeroy & Boch has introduced eight different home urinal designs in the last four years. “This is found business,” says Tim Schroeder, president of Duravit U.S.A., whose water-free model sells for $895.
Even developers and builders are taking note. The Duravit Utronic comes standard in roughly half of the 260 units of the new Turnberry Ocean Colony towers near Bal Harbour, Fla., where homes ranging in price from $1.4 to $4 million are almost completely sold out.
Source: The New York Times, Suzanne Gannon (01/25/07)
Brookhollow home development to contain 2,500 lots
(Prosper) - Developers have tied up enough land in the town of Prosper for a 1,300-acre residential project. Landplan Development Corp. of Frisco unveiled that the development on U.S. Highway 380 east of Preston Road, called Brookhollow, will have lots for 2,500 homes. Developers purchased 760 acres for the project on the north side of U.S. 380 and have more than 500 under contract. The development is near the Stonebridge Ranch community in McKinney. Construction is scheduled to begin on the Brookhollow project in 2007.
Dallas developer lands eastern Frisco land
(Frisco) - Hanover Property Co. is continuing its aggressive North Texas expansion, snapping up 325 prime acres in for an 825-home residential development. The deal involved the assemblage of three adjacent tracts that are north of Panther Creek Parkway and south of Rock Hill Road in Frisco. Hanover targets middle-market, second-time homebuyers, generally looking to pay $200,000 and up for a new home. Hanover will be talking to homebuilders over the next two to four weeks to gauge their interest in the new Frisco development, dubbed Miramonte. Until it picks builders, it's hard to put a price tag on the neighborhood. It's the second big project the company is tackling this year. Three months ago, Hanover acquired 920 acres off F.M. 548 in Forney for a 2,700-home residential community called Devonshire. Seven homebuilders are already on board. Lot development of the first 600-home phase will begin in November, with lots ready in late 2007 and homes ready for occupancy in 2008. "That area of east Frisco, pushing into McKinney, is showing excellent results, producing 1,400 home starts a year," Ted Wilson with Residential Strategies Inc. said. "It also has an extremely tight lot supply, at 18 months, when equilibrium is 24 months. The prices are slightly less than what you see in west Frisco, but still high."
Wednesday, January 24, 2007
Collin County land prices holding their own
"As prices have inflated, the real estate market ballooned up and now air is coming out of the bubble. Collin County did not blow up," said Betty Magee of Magee & Associates, Realtors. The median price of an existing, single-family home in California for November of 2006 was $555,290, a 1.4 percent increase over the revised $547,870 median for 2005 as reported by the California Association of Realtors. In New York the numbers are less severe. The November 2006 statewide median sales price of $250,000 represented a 5.7 percent decline from the November 2005 median of $265,000. The November 2006 median did increase by 3.5 percent compared to the October 2006 median of $234,000. As for Collin County, the median price for November 2006 was $193,700, $361,590 less than California. According to the Real Estate Center, single-family homes sales for December of 2006 in Collin County were at 6,333, a 5 percent decrease from the following year. The 5 percent decrease can be seen as a positive compared to November homes sales that were down 7 percent from the previous year. While home sales are down, the December average price per home was up 2 percent from the previous year, indicating that there is a slight appreciation. The Dallas Morning News reported a 5 percent decrease in housing sales last week.
[Inside Collin County Business]Beautiful Day
The sun is finally back in Ocean Shores. It's 50 degrees outside, the sky is blue and the sun is shining. I took these two pictures while out this morning driving on the beach. The first is a bald eagle sitting on the beach and the other is a view of the Olympic Mountains from the beach.
JeffMonday, January 22, 2007
O.S., county talk about sewer, water for N. Beach
Thursday, January 18, 2007 10:53 AM PST
OCEAN SHORES — The City of Ocean Shores and Grays Harbor County officials are looking for a way to bring sewer service to residents just north of Ocean Shores and to improve the water system in the area.
“(Residents of Oyehut and Illahee would pay) the same as us, it’ll just be in their monthly fee, not in their property tax. ... But no one could really agree,” McEachin said, and the issue was dropped, despite having the project’s engineering, right-of-ways and the LID assessment completed.
Wednesday, January 17, 2007
Laundry Room
Monday, January 15, 2007
Garden Water Features
Saturday, January 13, 2007
New Condo Complex coming North of the Casino?
The Quinault Beach Resort at Hogan’s Corner opened in 2000. Southall said the resort would partner with a points-based time-share company like Trendwest, where time-share buyers choose destinations based on the amount of points they accumulate.Both Tsukada and Southall said the resort is doing well, and the demand exists to support expansion.
Developer Compensates for Damage to Ocean Shores Wetlands
OCEAN SHORES, Washington, January 8, 2007 (ENS)
Developer Dunes Estates Inc. has agreed to permanently preserve and enhance over 114 acres of wetlands near the upscale city of Ocean Shores as part of a settlement with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency for Clean Water Act violations.
Dunes Estates was charged last year with dredging and filling wetlands adjacent to the Pacific Ocean and Connor Creek without a permit between 1998 and 2001.
The corrective actions contained in the enforcement agreement made public January 4 are intended to compensate for the loss of 1.7 acres of coastal dune wetlands and the excavation of 2.7 acres of wetlands adjacent to Connor Creek, a salmon bearing creek.
The wetlands are just north of Ocean Shores in Grays Harbor County on the central Washington coast. Under the terms of the agreement, Dunes Estates Inc. has agreed to enhance 2.9 acres of wetlands impacted during the excavation of wetlands along Connor Creek, create approximately 3.4 acres of wetlands, and permanently preserve over 114 acres of wetlands and wetland buffers. Another part of the settlement was an $8,000 fine imposed by the EPA last summer.
“Protecting Washington's shrinking wetlands is a top priority for EPA," said Tom Eaton, EPA's Washington State Director in Olympia. "Wetlands provide significant wildlife habitat as well as provide benefits to neighboring property owners. Anyone working in wetlands must obey the law and protect them."
The EPA has been working with Dunes Estates Inc., the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife and Grays Harbor County to assure that the restoration is carried out according to law.
Now famous, the coastal city of Ocean Shores was a cattle ranch until 1960, but it boomed as a celebrity destination after entertainer Pat Boone became a local resident in 1967 as a stockholder in the Ocean Shores Estates Incorporated. The community became well known as a result of the famous Celebrity Golf tournaments hosted by Boone. By 1969 Ocean Shores was declared the "Richest Little City" with an assessed evaluation of $35 million and 900 permanent residents. During the 1980s, the town struggled through the state's economic recession, but by the 1990s the slump was over and construction of homes and businesses has increased.